The Cheat SheetIs Italy at Risk of Leaving the Euro? – The Cheat Sheethttp://www.cheatsheet.com
The Lowdown on Business, Tech, Entertainment, Sports, Life, Autos, Personal Finance and Politics.Sat, 10 Dec 2016 03:11:00 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=4.6.1Is Italy at Risk of Leaving the Euro?http://www.cheatsheet.com/stocks/is-italy-at-risk-of-leaving-the-euro.html/
http://www.cheatsheet.com/stocks/is-italy-at-risk-of-leaving-the-euro.html/#respondWed, 27 Feb 2013 21:39:04 +0000Dan Ritterhttp://wallstcheatsheet.com/?p=386765Politics and economics are an unhappily married couple, and for better or worse the status of one informs the other. This was evidenced at the beginning of the week by the results of the elections in Italy, which threw global markets into confusion. As Europe’s third-largest economy, and as a nation suffering a debt crisis and double-digit headline unemployment, international investors have a vested interest in the economic — and therefore political — status of the country.

First, for a little bit of context: Italy just held a significant vote, which redrew the lines of power established after former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was forced to resign and Mario Monti assumed power. The race was pretty much between Berlusconi’s conservative party, the center-left Democratic Party led by Pier Luigi Bersani and largely aligned with Monti’s centrist coalition, and the more-or-less anti-establishment Five-Star Movement led by Beppe Grillo. Or, in even broader terms: the right, the left, and the middle.

Monday’s market confusion was catalyzed by early polling that showed the center-left Democratic party leading the race. This is the party favored by international investors because of their pro-austerity stance. The austerity measures adopted by Monti — an economist who led the government of technocrats that stepped in to try to solve the nation’s debt crisis — were largely a condition required by creditors like the European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund, who are helping orchestrate and fund the country’s recovery.

But austerity sucks, and Italian voters voiced their dissent with the measures in the election…

According to The Telegraph, nearly 57 percent of the Italian vote went to parties that want to throw away the austerity measures instituted by the European Union as a requirement for assistance. Unsurprisingly, that 57 percent represents a controlling majority of senate seats. Grillo’s Five-Star Movement won 25 percent of the vote itself, and the party has made the return to the lira one of its pledges. Berlusconi’s party has also threatened to pull the country out of the common-currency bloc.

Let that roll around for a moment. Many observers believe that a collapse of the Italian economy would be significant enough to drag down the entire region — and many observers believe that abandoning austerity measures and leaving the common currency would lead to a massive economic downturn.

One of the overriding fears is that without the willingness to comply, the ECB won’t be able to support the Italian bond market through its Outright Monetary Transactions (“OMT) mechanism. The broad European recovery strategy is fragile as is, and opposition could catalyze a destructive unraveling of progress.

As it stands, Italy did manage to orchestrate a successful bond sale after the election. The country sold its target of 2.5 billion euros ($3.27 billion) worth of 3.50 percent BTP bonds dated November 2017 at a yield of 3.59 percent. Italy also managed to sell 4 billion euros ($5.23 billion) of a new 4.50 percent BTP dated May 2023 at 4.83 percent. The yield on the nation’s benchmark 10-year note fell slightly to 4.81 percent.